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<p>Much ado here is to bring Daniel to be able to bear what Christ has to say to him. Still we have him in a fright, hardly and very slowly recovering himself; but he is still answered and <i>supported</i> with <i>good words</i> and <i>comfortable words</i>. Let us see how Daniel is by degrees brought to himself, and gather up the several passages that are to the same purport.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">I. Daniel is in a great consternation and finds it very difficult to get clear of it. The hand that <i>touched him</i> set him at first <i>upon his knees and the palms of his hands</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.10" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.10">Dan. 10:10</a>. Note, Strength and comfort commonly come by degrees to those that have been long cast down and disquieted; they are first helped up a little, and then more. <i>After two days he will revive us, and</i> then <i>the third day he will raise us up</i>. And we must not <i>despise the day of small things</i>, but be thankful for the beginnings of mercy. Afterwards he is helped up, but he <i>stands trembling</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.11" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.11">Dan. 10:11</a>), for fear lest he fall again. Note, Before God <i>gives strength and power unto his people</i> he makes them sensible of their own weakness. <i>I trembled in myself, that I might rest in the day of trouble</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Hab.3.16" href="/passage/?search=Hab.3.16">Hab. 3:16</a>. But when, afterwards, Daniel recovered so much strength in his limbs that he could stand steadily, yet he tells us (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.15" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.15">Dan. 10:15</a>) that he <i>set his face towards the ground and became dumb</i>; he was as a man astonished, who knew not what to say, struck dumb with admiration and fear, and was loth to enter into discourse with one so far <i>above him</i>; he <i>kept silence</i>, yea, <i>even from good</i>, till he had recollected himself a little. Well, at length he recovered, not only the use of his feet, but the use of his tongue; and, when he <i>opened his mouth</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.16" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.16">Dan. 10:16</a>), that which he had to say was to excuse his having been so long silent, for really he durst not speak, he could not speak: “<i>O my lord</i>” (so, in great humility, this prophet calls the angel, though the angels, in great humility, called themselves <i>fellow-servants to the prophets</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Rev.22.9" href="/passage/?search=Rev.22.9">Rev. 22:9</a>), “<i>by the vision my sorrows are turned upon me</i>; they break in up on me with violence; the sense of my sinful sorrowful state <i>turns upon me</i> when I see thy purity and brightness.” Note, Man, who has lost his integrity, has reason to blush, and be ashamed of himself, when he sees or considers the glory of the blessed angels that keep their integrity. “<i>My sorrows are turned upon me, and I have retained no strength</i> to resist them or bear up a head against them.” And again (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.17" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.17">Dan. 10:17</a>), like one half dead with the fright, he complains, “As for me, <i>straightway there remained no strength in me</i> to receive these displays of the divine glory and these discoveries of the divine will; nay, <i>there is no breath left in me</i>.” Such a <i>deliquium</i> did he suffer that he could not draw one breath after another, but panted and languished, and was in a manner breathless. See how well it is for us that the treasure of divine revelation is put into <i>earthen vessels</i>, that God speaks to us <i>by men like ourselves</i> and not by angels. Whatever we may wish, in a peevish dislike of the method God takes in dealing with us, it is certain that if we were tried we should all be of Israel’s mind at Mt. Sinai, when they said to Moses, <i>Speak thou to us, and we will hear, but let not God speak to us lest we die</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Exod.20.19" href="/passage/?search=Exod.20.19">Exod. 20:19</a>. If Daniel could not bear it, how could we? Now this he insists upon as an excuse for his irreverent silence, which otherwise would have been blame-worthy: <i>How can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord</i>? <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.17" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.17">Dan. 10:17</a>. Note, Whenever we enter into communion with God it becomes us to have a due sense of the vast distance and disproportion that there are between us and the holy angels, and of the infinite distance, and no proportion at all, between us and the holy God, and to acknowledge that we cannot <i>order our speech by reason of darkness</i>. How shall we that are dust and ashes speak to the Lord of glory?</p>
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<p class="tab-1">II. The blessed angel that was employed by Christ to converse with him gave him all the encouragement and comfort that could be. It should seem, it was not he whose glory he saw in vision (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.5,Dan.10.6" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.5,Dan.10.6"><span class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.5">Dan. 10:5</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.6">6</span></a>) that here <i>touched him</i>, and <i>talked with him</i>; that was Christ, but this seems to have been the angel Gabriel, whom Christ had once before ordered to instruct Daniel, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.8.16" href="/passage/?search=Dan.8.16">Dan. 8:16</a>. That glorious appearance (as that of the <i>God of glory</i> to Abraham, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.7.2" href="/passage/?search=Acts.7.2">Acts 7:2</a>) was to give authority and to gain attention to what the angel should say. Christ himself comforted John when he in a like case <i>fell at his feet as dead</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Rev.1.17" href="/passage/?search=Rev.1.17">Rev. 1:17</a>); but here he did it by <i>the angel</i>, whom Daniel saw in a glory much inferior to that of the vision in the verses before; for he was <i>like the similitude of the sons of men</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.16" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.16">Dan. 10:16</a>), one like the appearance <i>of a man</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.18" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.18">Dan. 10:18</a>. When <i>he</i> only <i>appeared</i>, as he had done before (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.9.21" href="/passage/?search=Dan.9.21">Dan. 9:21</a>), we do not find that Daniel was put into any disorder by it, as he was by this vision; and therefore he is here employed a third time with Daniel.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">1. He lent him his hand to help him, <i>touched him, and set him upon his hands and knees</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.10" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.10">Dan. 10:10</a>), else he would still have lain grovelling, <i>touched his lips</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.16" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.16">Dan. 10:16</a>), else he would have been still dumb; again he <i>touched him</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.18" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.18">Dan. 10:18</a>), and put strength into him, else he would still have been staggering and trembling. Note, The hand of God’s power going along with the word of his grace is alone effectual to redress all our grievances, and to rectify whatever is amiss in us. One touch from heaven brings us to our knees, sets us on our feet, opens our lips, and strengthens us; for it is God that works on us, and <i>works in us, both to will and to do</i> that which is good.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">2. He assured him of the great favour that God had for him: Thou art <i>a man greatly beloved</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.11" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.11">Dan. 10:11</a>); and again (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.19" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.19">Dan. 10:19</a>), <i>O man greatly beloved</i>! Note, Nothing is more likely, nothing more effectual, to revive the drooping spirits of the saints than to be assured of God’s love to them. Those are greatly beloved indeed whom God loves; and it is comfort enough to know it.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">3. He silenced his fears, and encouraged his hopes, with good words and comfortable words. He said unto him, <i>Fear not, Daniel</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.12" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.12">Dan. 10:12</a>); and again (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.19" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.19">Dan. 10:19</a>), <i>O man greatly beloved! fear not; peace be unto thee; be strong, yea, be strong</i>. Never did any tender mother quiet her child, when any thing had grieved or frightened it, with more compassion and affection than the angel here quieted Daniel. Those that are beloved of God have no reason to be afraid of any evil; peace is to them; God himself speaks peace to them; and they ought, upon the warrant of that, to speak peace to themselves; and that peace, that <i>joy of the Lord</i>, will be <i>their strength</i>. Will God <i>plead against us with his great power</i>? will he take advantage against us of our being overcome by his terror? <i>No, but he will put strength into us</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Job.23.6" href="/passage/?search=Job.23.6">Job 23:6</a>. So he did into Daniel here, when, by reason of the lustre of the vision, <i>no strength</i> of his own <i>remained in him</i>; and he acknowledges it (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.19" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.19">Dan. 10:19</a>): <i>When he had spoken to me I was strengthened</i>. Note, God by his word puts life, and strength, and spirit into his people; for if he says, <i>Be strong</i>, power goes along with the word. And, now that Daniel has experienced the efficacy of God’s strengthening word and grace, he is ready for any thing: “<i>Now, Let my lord speak</i>, and I can hear it, I can bear it, and am ready to do according to it, <i>for thou hast strengthened me</i>.” Note, To those that (like Daniel here) have no might God <i>increases strength</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Isa.40.29" href="/passage/?search=Isa.40.29">Isa. 40:29</a>. And we cannot keep up our communion with God but by strength derived from him; but, when he is pleased to put strength into us, we must make a good use of it, and say, <i>Speak, Lord, for thy servant hears</i>. Let God enable us to comply with his will, and them, whatever it is, we will stand complete in it. <i>Dan. quod jubes, et jube quod vis—Give what thou commandest, and then command what thou wilt</i>.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">4. He assured him that his fastings and prayers had come up for a memorial before God, as the angel told Cornelius (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.10.4" href="/passage/?search=Acts.10.4">Acts 10:4</a>): <i>Fear not, Daniel</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.12" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.12">Dan. 10:12</a>. It is natural to fallen man to be afraid of an extraordinary messenger from heaven, as dreading to hear evil tidings thence; but Daniel need not fear, for he has by his three weeks’ humiliation and supplication sent <i>extraordinary</i> messengers to heaven, which he may expect to return with an olive-branch of peace: “<i>From the first day that thou didst set thy heart to understand</i> the word of God, which is to be the rule of thy prayers, and to <i>chasten thyself before thy God</i>, that thou mightest put an edge upon thy prayers, <i>thy words were heard</i>,” as, before, <i>at the beginning of thy supplication</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.9.23" href="/passage/?search=Dan.9.23">Dan. 9:23</a>. Note, As the <i>entrance of God’s word is enlightening</i> to the upright, so the entrance of their prayers is pleasing to God, <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.119.130" href="/passage/?search=Ps.119.130">Ps. 119:130</a>. From the first day that we begin to look towards God in a way of duty he is ready to meet us in a way of mercy. Thus ready is God to hear prayer. <i>I said, I will confess, and thou forgavest</i>.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">5. He informed him that he was sent to him on purpose to bring him a prediction of the future state of the church, as a token of God’s accepting his prayers for the church: “<i>Knowest thou wherefore I come unto thee</i>? If thou knewest on what errand I come, thou wouldst not be put into such a consternation by it.” Note, If we rightly understood the meaning of God’s dealings with us, and the methods of his providence and grace concerning us, we should be better reconciled to them. “<i>I have come for thy words</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.12" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.12">Dan. 10:12</a>), to bring thee a gracious answer to thy prayers.” Thus, when God’s praying people call to him, he says, <i>Here I am</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Isa.58.9" href="/passage/?search=Isa.58.9">Isa. 58:9</a>); <i>what would you</i> have with me? See the power of prayer, what glorious things it has, in its time, fetched from heaven, what strange discoveries! On what errand did this angel come to Daniel? He tells him (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.14" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.14">Dan. 10:14</a>): <i>I have come to make thee understand what shall befal thy people in the latter days</i>. Daniel was a curious inquisitive man, that had all his days been searching into secret things, and it would be a great gratification to him to be let into the knowledge of things to come. Daniel had always been concerned for the church; its interests lay much upon his heart, and it would be a particular satisfaction to him to know what its state should be, and he would know the better what to pray for as long as he lived. He was now lamenting the difficulties which his people met with in the present day; but, that he might not 205a be offended in those, the angel must tell him what greater difficulties are yet before them; and, if they be <i>wearied</i> now that they only <i>run with the footmen, how will they contend with horses</i>? Note, It would abate our resentment of present troubles to consider that we know not but much greater are before us, which we are concerned to provide for. Daniel must be made to know what shall befal his people <i>in the latter days</i> of the church, after the cessation of prophecy, and when the time drew nigh for the Messiah to appear, <i>for yet the vision is for many days</i>; the principal things that this vision was intended to give the church the foresight of would come to pass in the days of Antiochus, nearly 300 years after this. Now that which the angel is entrusted to communicate to Daniel, and which Daniel is encouraged to expect from him, is not any curious speculations, moral prognostications, nor rational prospects of his own, though he is an angel, but what he has <i>received from the Lord</i>. It was the <i>revelation of Jesus Christ</i> that the angel gave to St. John to be <i>delivered to the churches</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Rev.1.1" href="/passage/?search=Rev.1.1">Rev. 1:1</a>. So here (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.21" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.21">Dan. 10:21</a>): <i>I will show thee what is written in the scriptures of truth</i>, that is, what is fixed in the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God. The <i>decree of God</i> is a thing written, it is a <i>scripture</i> which remains and cannot be altered. <i>What I have written I have written</i>. As there are scriptures for the revealed will of God, the letters-patent, which are published to the world, so there are scriptures for the secret will of God, the close rolls, which are <i>sealed among his treasures</i>, the book of his decrees. Both are <i>scriptures of truth</i>; nothing shall be added to nor taken from either of them. The <i>secret things belong not to us</i>, only now and then some few paragraphs have been copied out from the book of God’s counsels, and delivered to the prophets for the use of the church, as here to Daniel; but they are the <i>things revealed</i>, even the <i>words of this law</i>, which belong <i>to us and to our children</i>; and we are concerned to study what is written in these <i>scriptures of truth</i>, for they are things which <i>belong to our everlasting peace</i>.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">6. He gave him a general account of the adversaries of the church’s cause, from whom it might be expected that troubles would arise, and of its patrons, under whose protection it might be assured of safety and victory at last. (1.) The <i>kings of the earth</i> are and will be its adversaries; for they set themselves against the Lord, and against his Anointed, <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.2.2" href="/passage/?search=Ps.2.2">Ps. 2:2</a>. The angel told Daniel that he was to have come to him with a gracious answer to his prayers, but that the <i>prince of the kingdom of Persia withstood him one and twenty days</i>, just the three weeks that Daniel had been fasting and praying. Cambyses king of Persia had been very busy to embarrass the affairs of the Jews, and to do them all the mischief he could, and the angel had been all that time employed to counter-work him; so that he had been constrained to defer his visit to Daniel till now, for angels can be but in one place at a time. Or, as Dr. Lightfoot says, This new king of Persia, by hindering the temple, had hindered those good tidings which otherwise he should have brought him. The kings and kingdoms of the world were indeed sometimes helpful to the church, but more often they were injurious to it. “When <i>I have gone forth</i> from the kings of Persia, when their monarchy is brought down for their unkindness to the Jews, then <i>the prince of Grecia shall come</i>,” <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.20" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.20">Dan. 10:20</a>. The Grecian monarchy, though favourable to the Jews at first, as the Persian was, will yet come to be vexatious to them. Such is the state of the church-militant; when it has got clear of one enemy it has another to encounter: and such a hydra’s head is that of the old serpent; when one storm has <i>blown over</i> it is not long before another rises. (2.) The <i>God of heaven</i> is, and will be, its protector, and, under him, the angels of heaven are its patrons and guardians. [1.] Here is the angel Gabriel busy in the service of the church, making his part good in defence of it twenty-one days, <i>against the prince of Persia</i>, and <i>remaining there with the kings of Persia</i>, as consul, or liege-ambassador, to take care of the affairs of the Jews in that court, and to do them service, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.13" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.13">Dan. 10:13</a>. And, though much was done against them by the kings of Persia (God permitting it), it is probably that much more mischief would have been done them, and they would have been quite ruined (witness Haman’s plot) if God had not prevented it by the ministration of angels. Gabriel resolves, when he has despatched this errand to Daniel, that he will return <i>to fight with the prince of Persia</i>, will continue to oppose him, and will at length humble and bring down that proud monarchy (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.20" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.20">Dan. 10:20</a>), though he knows that another as mischievous, even that of Grecia, will rise instead of it. [2.] Here is Michael our prince, the great protector of the church, and the patron of its just but injured cause: <i>The first of the chief princes</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.13" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.13">Dan. 10:13</a>. Some understand it of a created angel, but an archangel of the highest order, <a class="bibleref" title="1Thess.4.16,Jude.1.9" href="/passage/?search=1Thess.4.16,Jude.1.9"><span class="bibleref" title="1Thess.4.16">1 Thess. 4:16</span>; <span class="bibleref" title="Jude.1.9">Jude 1:9</span></a>. Others think that <i>Michael the archangel</i> is no other than Christ himself, the <i>angel of the covenant</i>, and the Lord of the angels, he whom Daniel saw in vision, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.5" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.5">Dan. 10:5</a>. He <i>came to help me</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.13" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.13">Dan. 10:13</a>); and there is <i>none but he that holds with me in these things</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Dan.10.21" href="/passage/?search=Dan.10.21">Dan. 10:21</a>. Christ is the church’s prince; angels are not, <a class="bibleref" title="Heb.2.5" href="/passage/?search=Heb.2.5">Heb. 2:5</a>. He presides in the affairs of the church and effectually provides for its good. He is said to <i>hold with the angels</i>, for it is he that makes them serviceable to the <i>heirs of salvation</i>; and, if he were not on the church’s side, its case were bad. But, says David, and so says the church, <i>The Lord takes my part with those that help me</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.118.7" href="/passage/?search=Ps.118.7">Ps. 118:7</a>. <i>The Lord is with those that uphold my soul</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Ps.54.4" href="/passage/?search=Ps.54.4">Ps. 54:4</a>.</p>
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